The Morning Briefing: #MeToo Claims Another CEO, Obama Speeches, and Much, Much More

Happy Monday morning!

Or to my Jewish friends, “Shana Tova!” That’s “for a good year” in Hebrew. It is Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year.

A new year, a new CEO of CBS…

#MeToo claims another powerful man.

Last night, CBS Chief Executive Les Moonves resigned, after six more women came forward to accuse him of sexual misconduct. The New Yorker‘s Ronan Farrow wrote two exposés — one in July and one on Sunday — giving voice to twelve women claiming Moonves abused them.

In a statement released Sunday evening, CBS said that Moonves would depart his position as chairman, president and CEO “effective immediately.” COO Joseph Ianniello was announced as president and acting CEO “while the Board conducts a search for a permanent successor.”

The network also announced that it and Moonves would donate $20 million to organizations that support “that support the #MeToo movement and equality for women in the workplace.” The $20 million would come out of any compensation Moonves is due to receive following the conclusion of an ongoing investigation into the allegations against him.

The allegations are extremely serious.

One of the women, Phyllis Golden-Gottlieb, reported her accusations to Los Angeles police last year, but they weren’t pursued because of the statute of limitations. She said that Moonves, while an executive at the Lorimar production studio in the late 1980s, pushed her head into his lap and forced her to perform oral sex.

At another time, she said an angry Moonves pushed her hard against a wall. When she resisted later advances, she began to be frozen out at the company, she said.

“He absolutely ruined my career,” she told the magazine.

Ironically, Moonves was an early champion of the #MeToo movement. He helped found the Commission on Eliminating Sexual Harassment and Advancing Equality in the Workplace, which is chaired by Anita Hill.

Moonves denied the “appalling accusations,” but he acknowledged consensual relations with three of the women before he started working at CBS.

Responses to Obama.

Former president Barack Hussein Obama has been making the rounds, campaigning for Democrats for the elections this fall. The speeches have proven unremarkable, except for the fact that they happened. A former president is not only getting his hands dirty with campaigning, but he has endorsed a long list of candidates, has gone on the speaking circuit, and attacks his successor by name.

“Barack Obama talked a lot about hope, but Donald Trump delivered the American Dream. All the economic indicators, what’s happening overseas, Donald Trump has proven to be far more successful than Barack Obama. President Trump is delivering the American Dream,” Trump quoted from Chaffetz.

The congressman delivered the remarks on “Fox and Friends” Sunday morning.

And President Trump also marked the anniversary of Hillary Clinton’s “basket of deplorables” remarks.

Obama seems to have forgotten that 2016 actually happened. Americans had a choice between his preferred candidate (Hillary Clinton), and his “worst nightmare” candidate (Donald Trump). We all know what happened.

Trump’s responses to Obama’s campaigning hit the mark, but Vice President Mike Pence had a bit more finesse.

“The truth is, the American people in 2016 rejected the policy and direction of Barack Obama when they elected President Donald Trump,” Pence told Fox News. “It was very disappointing to see President Obama break with the tradition of former presidents, and become so political and roll out the same tired argument that he and liberals have made over the last eight years.”

.@VP tells Chris: "it was very disappointing to see President Obama break with the tradition of former presidents, and become so political…the American people in 2016 rejected the policy and direction of Barack Obama when they elected President Donald Trump."Full intv Sunday. pic.twitter.com/WMNDwn93OX

“The more President [Barack Obama] speaks about the ‘good ole years’ of his presidency, the more likely President [Donald Trump] is to get re-elected,” Graham tweeted. “In fact, the best explanation of President Trump’s victory are the ‘results’ of the Obama Presidency!”

The more President @BarackObama speaks about the ‘good ole years’ of his presidency, the more likely President @realDonaldTrump is to get re-elected.

In fact, the best explanation of President Trump’s victory are the “results” of the Obama Presidency!

Amen to that. Americans were sick and tired of Obamacare, of the IRS targeting of conservative groups, of Benghazi, of Hillary Clinton’s corruption, of the VA scandal, and so much more. Obama’s “scandal-free” presidency was remarkably scandal-plagued.

The full extent of Obama’s corruption — his interventions against Trump during the 2016 election — has yet to be revealed. Indeed, RealClearInvestigations’ Lee Smith has come around to the theory that the Trump Tower meeting between Trump campaign officials and Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya was a Clinton set-up.

Finally, I want to get in U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley’s pitch perfect response to the New York Times anonymous “resistance” op-ed. Haley took to The Washington Post:

I, too, am a senior Trump administration official. I proudly serve in this administration, and I enthusiastically support most of its decisions and the direction it is taking the country. But I don’t agree with the president on everything. When there is disagreement, there is a right way and a wrong way to address it. I pick up the phone and call him or meet with him in person.

Like my colleagues in the Cabinet and on the National Security Council, I have very open access to the president. He does not shut out his advisers, and he does not demand that everyone agree with him. I can talk to him most any time, and I frequently do. If I disagree with something and believe it is important enough to raise with the president, I do it. And he listens. Sometimes he changes course, sometimes he doesn’t. That’s the way the system should work. And the American people should be comfortable knowing that’s the way the system does work in this administration.

Haley insisted that loyalty to Donald Trump is not the point, but trying to undermine him is still wrong.

He or she claims to be putting the country first, and that is the right goal. Everyone in government owes a greater loyalty to our country and our Constitution than to any individual officeholder. But a central part of our democracy requires that those who work directly for the president not secretly try to undermine him or his policies. What the author is describing is an extra-constitutional method of addressing policy disputes within the administration. That’s wrong on a fundamental level.

If the author truly is a senior administration official, then he or she has the kind of access to the president I described. If that is the case, this official has ample opportunity to try to persuade the president to change course. If the author is frustrated by an inability to persuade the president, then he or she is free to resign.

By making sweeping, but mostly unspecific, anonymous claims, the author creates many problems.

Her conclusion nailed it.

To Mr. or Ms. Anonymous, I say: Step up and help the administration do great things for the country. If you disagree with some policies, make your case directly to the president. If that doesn’t work, and you are truly bothered by the direction of the administration, then resign on principle. There is no shame in that.

The traditional ceremony of Shofar, the blowing of the rams horn in the sacrifice of Isaac, was part of the Rosh Hashanah ceremonies conducted by Jewish chaplains of the U.S. Army in far-off Iceland on Dec. 5, 1942. Chaplain Julius Liebert, who blows the horn, conducted the services. (AP Photo)